Athens weekly banner. (Athens, Ga.) 1889-1891, October 15, 1889, Image 3

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^avery ENDS. A LUANCS ON ps* Fl« «“»- “F*" 1 Hundr« d - „ F ,r.ner’8 Alliance, t i,i«e members—all »%*-»* '*** Slt ' , nnanl”""' 8 P*"- i^ W ;„,„ ll i.finS<l , ' ,ffort K „s.s*U t'> ,loUl the ^Ti l.ike county respynai- f"". ,i ve nt costs, but also ^“ iivell.C. Tuck and i.yie.to use their ef- THE COMING FAIR. THOUSANDS WILL THRONG THE CITY AND PAIR GROUNDS Multitudes of Visitor* Getting Ready foi The Show—The Premium Lists Ready Fop Distribution—The Show Bills Bern* Scattered Broadcast. Jiisi have >■ , jiiis bill and also ^lim? the present law « wll ;iJ c ; r0 r-«:;e..eral *200 per treasury of Clarke IfO® l,1L or U inaugurated by Tak taken up by the peo- . ,.’s "war on the Augusta Judina Senate Commit. i«i»l>°i |lttl, l to investigate the Already the N T ews officiously '■'.priiiei'ista to take the commit *'l’ r ' ffe want Augusta to keep oil' that committee. The r arf not sent on a pleasure w transact important State {or CARDUI,^ Tonic for Women. A palaie Chicken Car luijcechirkcn car” is the latest „f luxury in railway tran- kjl|;i The idea of carrying lire f hundreds or even thousands of Comfortably and with ample ar gils for feeding is by no means In fact the manner in which Italitre parked into small coops lilieaed to sutler for food and drink 1,10their way to market is often m ple of cruelty deserving of pun- ■t eChicago men of railway expe rt had one or two cars cou rted so as to contain a largo num- |separate coops with wire parti- giving room lor the fowls to move Land with arrangements for sup- outlie passengers with food and , and passageways by which each ml* reached. Thousands of ,eas can be carried in one of those lnwss the continent, in good cou ACKO."AUGHT tea cures Constipation. popularity of tin* sailor hat is Iso gre^that milliners, both here filooad, are using tiie<e simple -traight-brimined shape lirvim«!(■!.' inner and tulle (ruMcr so in slate. KruWt ,d. ■ tight, like t*«e ssion, deserves a The werk goes on. The Fair promises to excel all pre ceding ones. It will be different to all ever given on the grounds. The directers are alreadv shaking one another by the hand ever the success of their show, for each day further proves to them that the Fair will be a success in the fullest acceptation of the term. The work of giving the show has vir tually been completed. The show bills have been printed, and are now being scattered broadcast throughout the land. They are handsome and most at tractive ones, and will do much towards drawing the crowds to the Fair. They set forth the rare amusements of the Fair in gorgeous array and while they do not magnify in one particular the at tractions, they show that the coming Fair at Athens will be the most com plete ever held The premium lists have also been printed, and will be Issued from The Banner Job Office to-day in handsome and neatly arranged pamphlets. They will be sent to every section of North east Georgia, and will not only attract the exhibitors by tlie handsome prem iums offered but will also draw multi tudes of people all over the country to attend the great Fair. The directors deserve to be congratu lated on the success they have already attained in the matter of holding the Fair. The program of fun and general amusement they have arranged is compliment to them because it. already gives evidence of a grand old time at the Fair grounds so soon as the show opens. The directors took up the ma*ter after the Northeast Georgia Fair Association had given up the Fair as a hopeless un dertaking, and after the Farmer’s Alii ai.ee had declined to take hold. They have set to work on the arduous duty getting up the Fair and are now ready for opening up the grandest occasion of enjoyment Classic Athens ever knew The attractions which have been add ed to the programme lately, are as line as will be seen in the South again soon. The balloon ascension will cause the scores of visitors to stand spell bound, gazing at the flying aeronaut thous ands of feet in the air and when he leaps from his dizzy height to trust his life to a parachute, thousands of eager eyes will watch his daring feat in opeiiimoutli wonderment and greet him with vociferous cheers when he alights once more on mother earth. The music for the Fair will be fiom two of the finest bands in the South, and their sweet strains will be quite a Shot His Own Sou. Special to the 1: seer. Axoka, Muni., Oot, 9—Janies Dean prosperous farmer living in the town- hip of Frankfort, Wright county, made a shocking mistake Sunday morn ing, shooting and instantly killing his 9-pear-old son. For some time Dean has been missing his poultry, and just before daybreak Sunday he heard a noise in the hennery. Seizing a shot gun he went into the yard. Espying an object crouched in one corner of the hennery am] supposing it was an animal of some kind, Dean fired two shots at it. Ayproaching he was horrified to discover that the victim was his own son. The child’s head was blown to* pieces by the shots. Dean is prostratsd with grief, and it is feared he will go insane. STRANGE CREATURES Or THE DEEP. Refuses to Testify. Mrs. PatteVson who was stabbed in Grant Park some time ago by her hus- bond, refuses to testify against him. Mrs. Patterson had her throat cut by her husband in Banks county severa years ago. and liis bond of $1,000 was forfeited and collected.. She after this lived with her husband. This is the second attempt to take her life, but She ■ or to deliberate fraud. Stories of Marines Provln- That the Soa Serpent It Not h Mytlu *• Of late years there lias been a growing tendency to place more credence sjhan was at one time done in these tales of sea monsters appearing in untoward places and at inconvenient times to seafaring men of much credulity. No doubt the stories of the sea serpent and the- like were, many of them, proved to be little l»etter than sailors' yarns, spun for the amusement of greenhorns. Sometimes they were shown to have been grossly perverted narrations, which, when strip ped of their fictitious embroidery, shrank to very prosaic dimensions; and not un- frequently what perfectly honest people believed and tried to make others be lieve to be horrid monsters turned out to be bundles of seaweed, drift logs cov ered with barnacles, ribbon fishes of no great size, or even seals and basking sharks. Hence there has been a prone ness to place ail these stories in the same category, and, perhaps for this very rea son, sailors sensitive to ridicule have be come rather chary of “logging” such uncommon subjects. At the same rim*., unless everything like evidence is to be dismissed as fable when it does not fit into the preconceived notions of the the orist, it is idle to pretend tliat all these reports are due either to optical illusion THi W02LD OUGHT The world ought to 1 done for mein the cure | which was so bad as Ole by the physicians] went to bo treated. One I me n copy of an adver-1 Swilt's Specific, and 11 relief from tho first few I gi ldnally forced out or I soon cured sound and! TO mow IT, | know vhat S. S. 8. ha* | of a malignant Cancer | tic considered incura Chicago, where 1 I of my neighbor* sent ltiscinent in regard to- I began taking It. 1 got j doses; the poison was J my system, and I was " It is now tea S.S. and I have still clings to him. Dick Horubooker is a respected and well-to-do colored citizen of Spring- field, Mo. He says that one bottle of Swift’s Specific cured both himself and wife of a troublesome eruption of the skin. Max Stadler*s Big Prize of $15,500, A Daily News reporter dropped iuto Max Stadler & Co.’s well kpown cloth ing establishment at Broadway and Grand St., The latter held a telegraph dispatch in his right hand that read like this: New Orleans,July 20, 1889. Max Stadler, New York; One-five-one-six-six drew fifty thous and. M. A. Dauphin. In the other hand Mr. Stadlei l«*hl one-quarter ticket No.15,1(56in the July drawing of the Louisiana State Lottery. Mr. Stadler took his ticket to his friend Manager Hoey of the Adams Express company, for collection.—New York daily News, Augusta 7. mouths since I quit tak- INI h BgS.i had no sign of return of the dreadful Mrs. Ann Bothwzll. Au Sable, Mich., Dec. 29, *38. Bend for books on Blood Diseases and Cancers matfl-’d free. - The Swift Specific Co. ‘ Drawer 8. Atlanta. Ga CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL FILLS 233 CE03S DIAX3S0 EJUND. ata&^aBazisss LADIESwfcofaT*Mitten. Xace Paper. Winchester Oo^Hadlsca Sq^Phii^pn. Gin-Cut Cotton. Our cottou buyers complain that while the grade of cotton is usually good this year, it samples badly owing to the staple being cut by fast ginning, farmers should look into this, as it saves the price. A great deal of cotton this year should classify “good middling” but for beiug cut up by the gin saws. Ik-serves the applause J U,1U l " c " 7 , “ “ . ami l.i- p.uck should be great addition t* the Fair, tint l,e ha- onlv one conso- Tt,e speaking of Gc, >e givat .Mister al ove who nil tiitf-t.* little fights between canine.-, will give the under liite a ret ,-as that which will t<m t!.,g, and the hard lines •‘tv rubbed out forevermore. Jay tiiuild will go hand in ■ ■ l ■ tic angels will chant the •t the under dug ju.it us sweetly '*iig those of the luckiest top ■ liched another. Ill !»AG(t] XG, b Yill Allow No Difference In ••• Rucker has selected one ai-s wrapped exclusively in and tested the market r ’> d gvt any allowance, off ‘ havers refused to knock - (hi the ether hand, a New 1 w- the large Eastern mills • h'ti k, r ye.-terday that there ^"I'wdiit about cotton-covered - is greater than the ai din' |, orgia’s most prominent men and greatest statesmen will draw the crowds and the great so cial and political subjects of the day will bediseassed with careful consider ation and magic eloquence. The ladies department will be a splendid display of handiwork and floral adornments. The ladies will have then* department the most attrai t- ive of all, and the directors will aid them in the work. Arrangements are now being made to have their hall lit up with electric light at night for the dancers to revel in bliss. The effort to get a couple to marry ,n cotton bagging costumes is meeting with much favor, and there is no doubt but that the loyal couple will show up in due time. A premium of $25 has been offered the couple that will do so, and many bridal presents will be pre sented to them on the grounds. Every feature of the Fair is on a great boom and the directors are happy be cause they will make the people happy, and all will move off on Nov. 12th in great style. 'fjute. :1IV unpleasant truths, ■' ■ ! 1 ‘' know them. but Fire im Birmingham. Birmingham, Ala.. Octobers.—A fire this morning destroyed the Thomas block on First avenue*, burning out the establishments of B. B. Ilayes, saloon : M S Gies, stationery; J B Brogin, tin ware ; G A Stowers, furniture; F. W. Fain, restaurant and saloon. Loss 823- 000, partially insured. The Augusta Evening News will be disappointed if the Senate committee to visit that city for the purpose of inspectingthe burlesoe fisliway don’t partake of the royal entertainment which it has promised them. Business before pleasure will be tho watchword of the committee, and they will unques tionably discharge their duty con scientiously before participating in the pleasures offered by the hospitable peo ple of the Fountain city. The scattered fragments of the Olive Bill and its numerous progeny were gatl e«*ed together yesterday in the Ho: se. Trie Berner Substitute was co - sidered first, and was discussed freely, But ail of tbi- time L wasted in argu ing over a bill that has been-slid Veil a long tinia since. animal meeting of tlie 1 . ’I t he Northeastern It.It. at 2 o’clock p. in ^■'ua.tf.ticr. IGtli, 1889, at the I! j|' u '’"’ l’nomas, Athens^Ga. s..;. | , ‘ l " i ' ON ’> l*ope Harrow, i ‘ctary. President. M:ch -» Minister Gets $r..000. " :|V '!"ly -b, the official cards d in twentieths, one- ,{Ir '* vTa"'V u , Lunsi "nM Mich. Con- kin rif,. '' 1,0 held the lucky num- ,! *vo„n* Swm . e Were °f opinion t V-ia„| ( ,’?. n ! an h.v the name of Oos- Wrcis *} the iron works, held, la -entire thing a Hifcid[° u :m< l snare. By pursuing ns the certaineil the owner fir’Ctd?,. «w*»ittlrig’y, l^tiok‘ iSce rtainpjl rlu» |tn,i;*^ can ’ A W*7 f arl ^ r *! k . il 'JC jackets are made a r tUs season than last. FARM NOTES- About one-fourth of the cotton that conies to Athens is covered with white bagging. A good deal of new jute bagging is now sold iu Athens—principally to the larger farmers. Col. A. F. Pope tells us that they are now making bagging of dead pinestraw. At first they had to use it green. A jute .bagging drummer yesterday confessed that nearly one-fourth of tlie Southern cotton crop will be baled in old jute and cotton. The war on the jute trust is Jelling. Newbagging can now be bought forten cents—the lowest price in three years, so it is said. The farmer’s boycott is making the trust men roost lower. The Banner proposes to publish the news, and lay the exact situation be fore its readers. It is right that our farmers know just how things are pro gressing, There is no sense in closing their eyes to facts. Soutache braids are still highly popu lar on certain styles of dresses, these put on in rows or crossing each other in naint fashion. , Tlie iuforceincnt of the cigarette law is bringing many violators to the city courts of tlie Georgia towns. The sooner this law breaks up the habit of smoking cigarettes so common among the young Americans the better for the general good of the State. Many of the stylish wool govrns have pretty loose waists of silk, baited and worn with Beau Brmumel coats that have lcose fronts and jersey-fitting bucks. There is a faney just now for ribbon trimming oil Die plain straw bat. Mass es of loops and ends are piled on the •rowu, entirely concealing it, while the brim is left-undecorated. I have used S. S, S. for debility re sulting from chills and fever, anil have found it to the best.tonie and appetizer that L even took. It also prevented tin- return of the chill. A J Anylirr, Eureka Springs, Ark. FARM FOR SALE. 1 offer for sale my farm in Bank* county, O.n.. about two ami one.balf miles tr im Harmony in ore. On the place are two settlements. One of tlie dwelling liou-c has live roo.:.-. Toe other one ka^ Six ro inAlt nece-sary out buildings, and tine fruit of aUJtiti .s. The place is well watered by never-failinjr running stream of water- There are two hundred (MQ) aeie- more or less including 30 it: res of bottom la- d, about one-li df iu a high State o i cu.t.va- t'oii. It is a splendid stock farm. Tn 3 balance .“ original and pine forest, it is situated m ar wo cWches. and a good school, te a ?‘>od quiet neighborhood, ify reason for selling is 1 w ist to ekange locations. Terms, one-half cash, K,ce note at S per cent, for one year. Apply to me ou place for particulars. ^ ^ gorek, Harmony Grove, Ga. The committee on privileges of the N. E. Ga., Stock and Poultry show will re ceive bids for refreshments, cigars and restaurant privileges until Saturday. October 19th, 1889. _ W. S. Holman, J. T. \ oss, J. N. Booth. • Cloth dresses are made with tight-fit- tiijo - sleeves, as full sleeves of so thick a material could not be worn with autumn and winter. lost of tlie men who have put their observations on record are notoriously of good character, keen eyesight and so long familiar with every appearance which the surface of the sea presents that it is simply shirking the quostion to suppose that they must have been de ceived or were attempting to deceive oth ers. In many instances an entire ship’s crew saw tlie monster, and in not a few the witnesses have been well known mer chant captains, or even the commanders of vessels in tlie royal navy. Thus Capt. Hope, of her majesty’s ship Fly, saw, fifty years ago, in the Gulf of California, a creature not unlike an alligator, with a long neck and four paddles, which many zoologists of eminence have not hesitated to regard as an animal of the icthyosau- rus or pleiosaurus type, that may have survived from ancient times in the still unexplored depths of the ocean. Again, Cupt. McQuahae, of Iter majesty’s ship Dmdalus, saw a snake like animal, which Richard Owen imagined might have been a large sea elephant. But the eye witnesses, all of whom were well ac quainted with the species in question, un hesitatingly repudiated this hypothesis. Scarcely moro mysterious is the story of the huge “snake” which the crew of the Pauline saw fourteen years ago, coiled twice round a sperm whale in the South Atlantic, and then, after towering up many feet in the air, dragging its prey to the bottom. Still more recently Capt. Pearson and Lieut. Hayne, of her majesty’s yacht Osborne, officially re ported seeing off the coast of Sicily a snake like animal fully thirty feet in length, with triangular fins rising five or six feet above the water, huge flippers Which moved like those of a turtle, and a head six feet in length. This might possibly, as Dr. Andrew Wilson has sug gested. have been a monstrous ribbon fish, though at the same time there were circumstances connected with its appear ance which render tlii3 suggestion of doubtful value, Dr. Gunther, among other eminent icthyologists, regarding tlie hyiHJthesis as out of keeping with v.-Uat is known regarding the habits of the regaiecus. Some of tlie “sea serpents” may, per haps, iiave been simply basking sharks, the bones washed up on the shores of the Isle cf Stronsay, in the Orkneys, and for a time thought to belong to some such animal, being now assigned to a species of tielache. Great cuttle fishes are also accountable for some of the '“snakes” seen by mariners. Such, undeniably, was the Ivraken which Hans Egede fig ures in his famous work on Greenland, and which time and again has been noticed off the American shores of such dimensions as to be quite capable- of dr agging small vessels under water, or lighting an unequal battle with the stout est men. Every allowance being made for the cuttle fish, the shark, the ribbon fish, the floating seaweed, the school of porpoises, the flight of sea fowl and the like, there remain a number of well au thenticated appearances which there is no accounting for in any such self com placent fashion, We ’might, perhaps, dismiss the “So-Orm” of Magnus and Pontoppiddan as marvels of an uncritical age, though in all other matters these clerical historians were as circumstantial as bishops ought to he.—London Stand ard. ■ A Newspaper “Fake” In China. Some time ago The Tien Sliili dial, an illustrated newspaper which is published in Shanghai, contained a long article concerning “The Manufacture of Soap- and Fertilizers from Human Bodies in Europe.” Tho article was very minute. It described the whole process of manu facture in detail, from the decapitation and disembowelmeut of the bodies to the stamping of violets and roses on tha finished soap cakes and the packing of the fertilizer for shipment. Numerous illustrations calculated to raise Chinese hair and to curdle Chinese blood embel lished the grewsome text. J ust how the editors of The Tien Shill Chai discovered that their European correspondent had been libeling European civilization they refuse to say. That the discovery,’ when made, quite upset them, however, is evi dent from this very abject retraction in a recent copy of their publication: “As wo subsequently learned by inves tigation, the descriptions of European soap and manure factories formerly pub lished by us are only the plans and in ventions of scientific men which have never been put into practice, and, there fore, our account of these factories and our pictures were wholly false. In the future we will make every effort to keep all untruthful articles out of our col umns. We make this announcement in order that through the foreign and Chi nese press we may confess our mistake, which we hops has done no harm.”—New York Sun. WORMS. Children 3uncnn«TrS^^iies^SmS!^^^5rz sytes can’t be relieved by so-called worm lezen- ger* wa:ch only tickle the palate. The time-tried tested cure is B. A. Fahnestock’s Vermifuge. A* you value tlie life of your child, don’t wait until spasm* and incurable sickness seize it, but gel wua reliable remedy at once t it never faii£ SlJWMTgw w -*^EVEB FAIL^>^ Hebvi« 6 i f Tic 31! j J. State and County Taxes. GEORGIA—CLARKE COUNTY. Will lie sold before the- Court House door in Athens, Clarke County, Ga., within the leeal hours of sale on the first Tuesday iu November next the following property to-wit: A tract of land In the 219th district G. M. of Clarke county, containing three hundred acre# more or less adjoining lands’ of W. SF. Philips, Sarah Yerby and others. Levied on and to be sold as the pr perty of M. D. L. Pittman, Trus tee, to satisfy a tax ttfa issued by the Tax Collector of said county, for taxes on said property for the year 1888. Prop erty pointed out by raid Pitman. Levy mads by J. H. Matthews, L. C., and turned over to me for sale. Also, one house and lot in the City of Athens, one half acre more or less bounded, east by An derson Mathew’s estate, south by Walter Hec tor, west by Gaine’s Hill, north by Broad street; levied on and to be sold as the property of Mar tha Crawford to satisfy a tax flfa Issued by the Tax Collector of said county for taxes or the year 1888. Levy made by E, W. Porter, L, C., and turned over to me for sate. Also, one house and lot in tlie City of Athens one half acre more or less, bounded east by es tate of Anderson Mhthews, south by Walter ' Hector, west by Gaine’s Hill, north by Broad i street: levied on and to be sold as the property 1 of Martha Crawford to satisfy a state and coun ty flfa for tax of the year 1887 issued by the Tax Col ector of saiS county. Levy made by E, Porter, L. C., and turned over to me fo Ttiis 28th day day of September 1889. John W. Weir, Sheriff of Clarks County. [*GO§§lfERQB,j / A SPECIFIC FOR ssr* EPILEPSY, SPASMS, "W QQKYULSIGHS, FALLIMS S10KHESS, ST. VITUS DAHOE, ALSKDH3US3, OPIUM EATIHO, SYPHILUS, SCROFULA, KINGS EYiL, HOLY BLOOD DISEASES, DYSPEPSIA NERVOUSNESS, SI8K HEADACHE, RHEUMATISM, HERYGUS WEAKNESS. NERVOUS PROSTRATION, BRAIN WORRY, BLOOD SORES, BILIOUSNESS, OSSTiVENESS, KIDNEY TROUBLES m IRREGULARITIES gS^*lJ50 por little, hi insists. DR.S. A. RICHMOND NERVINE 68. S’jP. JOSEPH, 5IO. TRIAL BOTTLE FREE, At To decline taking a tare remedy when side, •w* is to court snffe-lug and invite death. On.- Liver Pills are sure euro lor Terpid Liver and. Oouattpatlen. Price 25c. At Brass 1st*. ltgMAVVABt.a For two vears I hod rheumatism sc bud that it disabled me for work uud confined me to my bed for a whole year, during which time E could noteven raise ray hands to my head, ana for 8 months could not move myself In bed.was reduced In flesh from 193 to 86 lbs. Was treat ed by best physicians, only to grow Seed Rye and Oats FOR SALE. We have fit sale the genuine Yellow Rust-Proof Oats, Raised by Col. Jame3 M. Smith, and that gentle man grew over 100 bushels per acre, ana they weigh over 40 pounds to the bushel. These are | tlie only oat i of thi: variety in Georgia, and are rold for onlv 75 centi per budiel—half their val ue. Also the pure Blue Ridge Seed Rye. The best adapted for this section. HODGSON BROS., ATHENS, GA. *rom the effects of Swift’s Specific. Johx Rat; Jan. 8.1869. Ft. Wayne, Ind. Books on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free. Swift Specific Co. Atlanta, G» G EORGIA, Clause county—To the Superior Court of said runty: 1 1st. The petition of James M. Smith, Benja- ( min B. Williams, George Dudley Thomas, John j W. Hinton, John R. White and Rufus K. Reaves 1 respectfully show that they together with suck other persons as they may associate with them.. -4*0. BodeH Cor. College Avenue and Clayton St. Has always on hand Fresh. Bread, CAKE CONFECTIONERIES. Also is now ready to furnish the pub lie with Ice Cream by Plate or Gallon. ALL SORTS Made to order. A.Go Sherberts. So ihv one wishing Cr«nm for PARTIES Oli PICNICS. Would do well to give him o call. The Klein & Martin wagons are the best in tlie Stute. w-tf CARTERS s’Jrrru: ■-e| iVEft ill PIUS. iirk HeadSfho and relieve all the troubles Inc; dcut to jflaiUotu stay; of tlie system, such at Du-zlnaes, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress a "ills'. Pain in tha Side, Ac. WUila their mon -cioarkablo success has been shown in cut'-nc SICK Headache, ye*. Carter's Little Liver Pills nr .molly valuable in Constipation, curing and p. a venting tb ; s annoying complaint, while they a!at correct ail disorders oi tho stomach, stimulai liver and rcgtjlr’e the bowels. Even if they T - HEAD Ache they would bo almos t priceless to thoao wi. -uui-t- from this distressing complaint, button-' im iely their goodness does notend here,and thos jiio once try them will find these little pills vs! r able in so many ways vhat ihey will not be -.v >iug to do without the in. But after all sicV 'u-e< ACHE j tho bane of so many lives that here is oi we make our great boast. Our piilscure ;* veil- ulherr do not. Carter’s Little Liver Pills are very sm*H an very easy to take. Ono or two pills make a do— They are strictly vegetable and do not grvne - ,>ur?rc, but by their gentlo action please ail w! ase them. In vialsat 25 cents; five for $1. ScV by druggists everywhere, -r sent by mail. CABTfu MEDICINE t0., New York. ys Sa*%s«a- wPr> period, Georgia Foundry and Machine Works.’’ 2d. The particular business they propose to carry on is that of a foundry and machine works, casting and manufacturing and mould ing much nevy and other articles of iron and brass and other metals, and of wood, and gene rally to carry on and perform all kinds of work an f business appropriate for a foundry and ma chine work-. The place where :t hey propose to carry on said business is Athens,Clarke County, ^M^Tlio capit al stock of said incorporation is to be at present twenty-five thiusaud dollars, with the i riviloge of increasing said capital stock at will to one hundred thousand dollars. Ten per cent, of said twenty-five thousand dol- lais has been duly paid in. Wherefore pent oners pray the court to pass an order granting th.s application, and incorpo rating them.under the name, and for the pur pose and for tlie time herein specified. Alex. 8 Krwin, Petitioners’ Attfrr.ey. rt EORGTA.' larke county—I, C. D. Vincent. It clerk Superior Co rr, do certify that the above and foregoing petiti n is a true extract from the minutes oil ' larke Superior court and that sains have be«i duly filed and record- ed- T. is Sept. 20,1889. C. D. Vincent, Clerk.S. C. ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE. Georgia Claike County. By viirtue of an order of ihe ( ov.rt of Ordinary of said county will be sold before the Court, House door in Athens, Ciaike county, Ga. on the fir a Tue-day in On to:!-. r 1889, within tlie legal hours of sale tn» following real estate belonging to the estate of Mr-. Jane V. Bertlirg, deceased, to-wit: 1st. Tae house and lot f: oiuing east on Lump kin S reet, now occupied by W. G. Cavirhers, and known as tlie Washburn residence, adjoin ing the property of F. Pliin'zy on the North, and adjoining ou the South the 'ot next described. 2 i. Tiie house r,n l lot fronting B-ist on Lumpkin Street, South of the property lust de scribed and adjoining o:i the South tlie lot of G. S. Shcwell, being the-ate res denre of Mrs. .1. k; Bertling and nowoccupied by W. B..Ta-kson- Terms cash. .1. S. "WILLIFORD. Executor of Mis. Jane E. Bertling. T£ eFelve F S ale. GEOHCIA Habersham Co mty. By virtue of an order, or decree from the Superior C ut t of said county, there will be ,o d on the fir t Tue-day in December-1 Fi t, with n the legal hours of sale,.before the Court house door in the town of Clatkesville, ;said State and County, to the highest bidacr for cash, the following property towit: A certa n t act parcel of land in said county on the Poqtie river known as apart of lot of land Xo.18 in the 10th district of said c •unty, co ntaining one hundred and seventv-suc Jlio) acres, ana more fully <1e cnlied in a deed Xtjiii w. S. Erwin to G. J. Fureacre et. al., dated January 22d 1888,’and recorded in the Clerk s office of the Superior Court of said county in book ”D. Dr” folio -NR. Al-o a itract or parcel of land adjoining the foregoing, being a part of - I lot No. n the Kth dis.rie: of-said county, containing fort' - acret, and more fully described folio 411. Also ten acies of land a-lioininff the above des -r'died lands, purchased by Souue Woolen M ils of Mm. Sis. Gables. All the above de-cribc 1 lan is comprising,what is known as the So iiie W oolen M lls tract of laud* being the land upon u hi -h ra. d .Mills are situ ated, together with all the houses out-aouses. C« + , <29^0 00 A MONTH can £p/U« LO lie mame work ing for ns. Agents preferred who can furnish a horse and give their whole time to business. Spare moments may lie profitably employed also. A few vacancies in towns and cities. B. F. JOHNSON & CO., 1009 Main street, Rich mond, Va. N. B.—Please state age and business experi ence. Never mind about sending stamp, fer re ply. B.F.J.&CO. manufacture of woolen goods. Also a eec of Custom Cards, Grist mill. Blacksmith vhop tools lank, pipes, hose, and all .oilier m icbinery or fixtures belonging to and connected w,t,i the said machinery of the Soque \A onion Mills. All the above described property being the plant, v/ater power, t eal estate, and machinery belong ing to the St quo Woolen Mills, a corporation cliartejed unuer the laws of th's tstate Idr the pur-ose of manuiac.tur.ng woolen goods and .frane, and the Fame will be sold as the property ■ aid coi-poraticn, under and by virtue of the snt decree of the Superior Court as atort- Terins of sale Cash. H. S. W Ed Receiver SoqaeWooleu ADMISISTRATOB’S-#ALE; G eorgia—<;labke cnuntv—By viitne of an order of the court of Ordinary of Clark s county, granted at the August te-.m 1889, of taid court,' will be sold before the Court Hcuredoo'r in Athens, Clarke county, Georgia, on the first Tuesday in October nex , within thp legal hours of sale, the following property to-wit: All that tract or lot of land lying on 8tr< ng street, with all the improvements thereon: lot containin'.- half acre, more or less. Terms cash, and sold as the property of James Newton, deceased. John S. Willifoud Adm’r.